Web & Social Media: Changing the Way Families Stay Connected

As personal computers entered widespread office use in the 1980s, one limitation quickly became clear: How do I share the work I’ve done on my computer with someone else? In response, users almost immediately began looking for ways to connect one computer to another. Soon small “networks” of interconnected computers were popping up everywhere, and when those networks began to expand and connect with each other, the World Wide Web as we know it today was born.

Today’s Internet is faster and far more popular than it was 20 or 30 years ago, but the basic infrastructure remains the same. The real changes of late haven’t been in the way machines connect online, but in the way people connect online. The Internet has gone far beyond a simple network of machines. It has become a network of people, as well as a platform for all kinds of services — think of Google, eBay, and countless others — that simply wouldn’t exist without it.

By now, you’ve probably at least heard of blogging, Facebook, Twitter, and other popular social media platforms. Even traditional media— such as newspapers, radio and TV — have gone social, engaging and connecting with their audiences in all of these new ways. Of course, whether you take your headlines from a newspaper or a Twitter feed doesn’t change the headline. The revolutionary difference with social media is in the name: it’s social!

Social media tools take what used to be a monologue — a one-way message from a speaker to an audience — and transform it into a dialogue of interactive conversations in which anyone can participate in real time. In fact, the most popular social media uses by far have little to do with work or network news. In online communities like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, the headlines are all about you, your friends and your family. With internet and social media tools, the busy lives of far-flung families and friends can connect in ways that time and distance would otherwise make difficult (or even impossible).

FAST FACTS
There are over 1.7 billion Internet users in the world today, including over 220 million in the United States. 77% of American adults use the Internet, and their top 10 uses are:

Send or read email

Use a search engine to find information

Search for a map or driving directions

Look for health/medical info

Look for info on a hobby or interest

Look for information online about a service or product you are thinking of buying

Check the weather

Buy a product

Get news

Go online just for fun or to pass the time – Internet World Stats, September

2009; Pew Internet and American Life Project, September 2009

PARTICIPATORY MEDICINE

These new interactive capabilities are having a profound impact on healthcare. Pew notes that 8 in 10 Internet users — or 61% of U.S. adults— have looked online for health information. More patients are more knowledgeable than ever before, and they’re staying online to discuss and share what they’ve learned. Online communities focused on healthcare are serving to quickly exchange information, questions and answers between healthcare providers, patients, families and friends. Subjects range from simple procedures and advice on parenting to full-on

emotional support when facing a chronic illness or the loss of a loved one. This online democratization of healthcare information is a key component of what’s being called “participatory medicine” — a model of medical care that emphasizes an active role for the patient. When you or your loved ones fall ill, knowledge is especially empowering and comforting — as is the understanding that you are part of a larger community.

SOCIAL MEDIA AND YOUR HEALTH

Of course, the vast majority of people with a health problem want to consult a healthcare professional in person, and the prevalence of online information makes some people worry about a world that seems more isolated, not less. But recent studies have shown that active users of new communication technologies are actually deepening their social circles, not shrinking them. In addition, the very act of participating in social media may have some health benefits of its own. “Our survey results suggest that people’s lives are likely to be enhanced by participation with new communication technologies, rather than by fearing that their use of new technology will send them into a spiral of isolation.”

CONNECTING FAMILIES

Social media first took root in college towns and other clusters of high-tech young people, but its explosive growth since has hardly been limited to teens and tweens. Once families find out how easy it is to stay in closer contact with a few short messages (like on Facebook), some shared photos (maybe with Flickr), or even by making a video call (as you can with Skype), it’s easy to get hooked!

ALL IN THE FAMILY

Two of the fastest-growing age groups on Facebook are 35-54 year olds in general, and women age 55 and older. The largest percentage increase in Internet use since 2005 has been in the 70-to-75 age group. Even though the conversations can be brief, and sometimes may even seem a little mundane, there is something powerful about regular contact. Life is lived in the details, and sometimes the “little things” are more meaningful and poignant than we might expect, as a member of our BrightStar Care family discovered firsthand:

“Around October of last year, my aunt joined Facebook. She had recently found out that her breast cancer had returned and had spread to her bones. She lived all the way in Arizona, and the distance usually made it difficult to keep in touch and even more so to visit. But on Facebook, we kept in touch, sending the occasional message and sharing photos — none of which would have been possible without it. Even though we couldn’t be together, when she passed away in May, I was so thankful that we were able to connect — so grateful for something so seemingly tiny as a few messages. It meant a lot. And I still drop by her Facebook profile from time to time to look at her photos and leave a message. I suspect that I’m not the only one who has had this kind of experience with Facebook. It literally changed my relationship with my aunt.” – Erin S., Chicago

HEALTHY INTERACTION

With social media, staying home for health reasons doesn’t necessarily mean you’re confined to those four walls. The interactive and social nature of the online world has opened up countless opportunities to connect and stay connected, regardless of your age or ability. It can be a great way to share your thoughts and feelings, solicit feedback from an engaged audience, make new friends around shared interests, and keep in touch with loved ones who may live far away. It can stimulate brain activity, boost your mood and relieve stress, all of which can make a significant impact on people with dementia, Alzheimer’s, depression and other conditions. It sounds good for you, and some research is starting to back that up. A recent university study indicated that spending time on the Internet can help slow the effects of dementia by boosting the brain activity of the elderly.

Using brain scans, a team at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) found that using the Internet stimulated the mind more strongly than reading, with effects that continued long after an Internet session had ended. For seniors who did not usually surf the Web, the use of the Internet was found to change brain activity patterns and enhance function. Socializing is important at any age. In fact, some other studies point to a direct correlation between strong social ties and lifespan. Blogging and social media tools like Facebook are helping seniors to connect with others and express themselves from the comfort of their own home.

ONLINE HEALTH COMMUNITIES

In addition to the widespread popularity of general social communities, online health communities are making news and growing by the day. Here are a few examples: